Skip to main content

Utility

  • Find Your Local ADL
  • Report an Incident
  • Press

Header Social Links

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • TikTok
ADL Logo
  • About
    • Mission and History
    • Who We Are
    • Regional Offices
    • ADL Education
    • Partnerships
    • ADL Litigation
    • ADL International
    • ADL and Israel
    • Myths and Facts About ADL
    • Careers
    Our Team
    Who We Are
    U.S. Supreme Court building
    ADL Litigation
  • Centers & Institutes
    • Center on Extremism
    • Center for Technology and Society
    • Center for Antisemitism Research
    • Center to Combat Antisemitism in Education
    • ADL Ratings & Assessments Institute
    Map of antisemitism incidents
    Center on Extremism
    Center for Technology and Society
    Center for Technology and Society
    Center for Antisemitism Research
    Center for Antisemitism Research
  • What We Do
    • Fight Antisemitism
    • Combat Extremism
    • Disrupt Online Hate and Harassment
    • Challenge Bias
    Fighting Antisemitism
    Fight Antisemitism
    Alt Right, Neo Nazis hold torch rally at UVA
    Combat Extremism
  • Resources
    • Research and Analysis
    • Press Center
    • Hate Symbols Database
    • Antisemitism Uncovered
    • ADL Legal Action Network
    • Tools to Track Hate
    • For Families and Educators
    • For Law Enforcement
    ADL's Jewish Policy Index
    Jewish Policy Index
    ADL's Campus Antisemitism Report Card
    Campus Antisemitism Report Card
    Map plotting antisemitic incidents throughout the U.S.
    H.E.A.T. Map
  • Take Action
    • Report an Incident
    • Report to ADL Legal Action Network
    • Advocate with ADL
    • Find Ways to Give
    • Attend an Event
    • Shop ADL
    • Bring ADL to Your School or Community
    • Bring ADL to Your Workplace
    • Attend Our Never Is Now Summit
    • Join the Glass Leadership Institute
    Audience of people at ADL's Never is Now 2022
    Attend an Event
Donate
ADL Logo
  • About
    • Mission and History
    • Who We Are
    • Regional Offices
    • ADL Education
    • Partnerships
    • ADL Litigation
    • ADL International
    • ADL and Israel
    • Myths and Facts About ADL
    • Careers
    Our Team
    Who We Are
    U.S. Supreme Court building
    ADL Litigation
  • Centers & Institutes
    • Center on Extremism
    • Center for Technology and Society
    • Center for Antisemitism Research
    • Center to Combat Antisemitism in Education
    • ADL Ratings & Assessments Institute
    Map of antisemitism incidents
    Center on Extremism
    Center for Technology and Society
    Center for Technology and Society
    Center for Antisemitism Research
    Center for Antisemitism Research
  • What We Do
    • Fight Antisemitism
    • Combat Extremism
    • Disrupt Online Hate and Harassment
    • Challenge Bias
    Fighting Antisemitism
    Fight Antisemitism
    Alt Right, Neo Nazis hold torch rally at UVA
    Combat Extremism
  • Resources
    • Research and Analysis
    • Press Center
    • Hate Symbols Database
    • Antisemitism Uncovered
    • ADL Legal Action Network
    • Tools to Track Hate
    • For Families and Educators
    • For Law Enforcement
    ADL's Jewish Policy Index
    Jewish Policy Index
    ADL's Campus Antisemitism Report Card
    Campus Antisemitism Report Card
    Map plotting antisemitic incidents throughout the U.S.
    H.E.A.T. Map
  • Take Action
    • Report an Incident
    • Report to ADL Legal Action Network
    • Advocate with ADL
    • Find Ways to Give
    • Attend an Event
    • Shop ADL
    • Bring ADL to Your School or Community
    • Bring ADL to Your Workplace
    • Attend Our Never Is Now Summit
    • Join the Glass Leadership Institute
    Audience of people at ADL's Never is Now 2022
    Attend an Event
Donate

Utility

  • Find Your Local ADL
  • Report an Incident
  • Press

Social Links

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • TikTok

Filters

Topic

  • Ability, Disability & Ableism
  • Anti-Bias Education
  • Anti-Israel Activity
  • Antisemitism Globally
  • Antisemitism in the US
  • Bias, Discrimination & Hate
  • Bullying & Cyberbullying Prevention
  • Civil Rights
  • Community Security
  • Criminal Justice Reform
  • Discrimination
  • Education
  • Education Restriction
  • Extremism, Hate or Terrorism
  • Free Speech
  • Gender & Sexism
  • General Hate Symbols
  • Genocide & Holocaust
  • Hate Acronyms/Abbreviations
  • Hate Crimes
  • Hate Group Symbols/Logos
  • Hate Slogans/Slang Terms
  • Immigrant & Refugee Communities
  • Israel
  • Jewish Culture & Antisemitism
  • Ku Klux Klan Symbols
  • Law Enforcement & Security
  • LGBTQ+
  • Neo-Nazi Symbols
  • Numeric Hate Symbols
  • Online Hate & Harassment
  • People & Culture
  • Race & Racism
  • (-) Racial Justice
  • Racist Hand Signs
  • Religion & Religious Bigotry
  • Religious Freedom
  • (-) Social Justice
    • Child & Youth Activism
    • Civil Rights
    • Human Rights
    • Social Justice Activism
    • Women's Rights
  • Voting Rights
  • White Supremacist Prison Gang Symbols
  • Women's Equality
  • Women’s Equity

Source

Type

  • Article
  • Backgrounder
  • Lesson Plan
  • Letter
  • News
  • Podcast
  • Press Release
  • Profile
  • Report
  • Tools and Strategies
  • Webinar

Center

  • ADL Education

Date

Filters

Sort

105 Results

Voting Rights Then and Now

Lesson Plan
American Voters Stand in Line
GRADE LEVEL: High School COMMON CORE STANDARDS: Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening Racial Discrimination and Safeguarding the Right to Vote In August 2015, we commemorated the 50th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act which was signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson in 1965. The Voting Rights Act is landmark federal legislation that was enacted during the Civil Rights Movement and was intended to prevent racial discrimination in voting. Prior to that, even though Black…
July 22, 2015
Read more about Voting Rights Then and Now

Race Talk: Engaging Young People in Conversations about Race and Racism

Tools and Strategies
High School Students Taking Part in Group Discussion Circle
For Educators Because discussions of race and racism are part of our public discourse, educators feel a sense of responsibility to bring these topics into their classrooms—because young people want to be part of the conversation and should be.  If handled effectively, these discussions provide opportunities for timely learning. Below are suggestions and strategies for having classroom conversations with young people about race and racism. Prior to these discussions and…
July 22, 2015
Read more about Race Talk: Engaging Young People in Conversations about Race and Racism

David Duke

Profile
For Law Enforcement David Duke, perhaps America's most well-known racist and anti-Semite, promotes anti-Semitic and white supremacist views as the leader of the white supremacist European American Unity and Rights Organization, as a writer of anti-Semitic tracts, and, in recent years, as an international figure who has promoted his anti-Jewish ideology in Europe and the Middle East, devoting particular attention to Russia and the Ukraine. Duke has been active in the white supremacy…
September 01, 2016
Read more about David Duke

The Rachel Dolezal Teachable Moment

Article
by: Jinnie Array June 19, 2015   Rachel Dolezal, President of the Spokane, Washington chapter of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), made headlines and became the top trending item on Twitter last week when it was discovered that she had been posing as Black for many years. In her interview on the Today Show, she continued to assert: “I identify as Black.” These events have sparked strong emotions—anger, confusion, sympathy,…
June 19, 2015
Read more about The Rachel Dolezal Teachable Moment

Swimming Pools and Segregation: A Long History

Article
Pullen Park public pool in Raleigh, NC closed in 1962 because of four Black male swimmers
June 15, 2015 In Summer 2015, an incident caught on video captured a police officer outside a community pool who appears to be waving his gun at young partygoers who approached him as he tried to subdue and eventually hold down a teenage girl. She was wearing a bikini because she was at a pool party. The party was held at the community pool in the Craig Ranch North subdivision, which is predominately white although McKinney, Texas is racially diverse. A group of African American…
June 15, 2015
Read more about Swimming Pools and Segregation: A Long History

To Confront Racism, We Must Also Look In the Mirror

Article
by: Jinnie Array March 16, 2015 Last week, disturbing video emerged of fraternity brothers from the Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) chapter at the University of Oklahoma laughing while singing a racist chant: “There will never be a ni**** SAE. You can hang him from a tree, but he can never sign with me. There will never be a ni**** SAE.” The news comes on the heels of the recent findings from a Department of Justice investigation in Ferguson, MO which, among other things,…
March 16, 2015
Read more about To Confront Racism, We Must Also Look In the Mirror

From Selma to Ferguson: Standing Together for Justice

Article
We March With Selma
March 02, 2015 What do you know about the events in Selma, Alabama in the 1960’s? What part of that history speaks to you? This year marks the 50th anniversary of the march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama. In the history books, we know this as Bloody Sunday, where 600 peaceful protestors were met with brutality. As events unfolded, the media captured photos and film of what would later become the impetus for thousands to become a part of the movement. Dr. King and his followers…
March 02, 2015
Read more about From Selma to Ferguson: Standing Together for Justice

10 Ideas for Teaching Black History Month

Lesson Plan
Bayard Rustin Speaking with Kids before Demonstration
Engage students in activities that get them to think broadly and critically about the Black experience in all of its complexity.
January 08, 2015
Read more about 10 Ideas for Teaching Black History Month

Beyond the Dream, Teaching King in Context

Article
Martin Luther King Hand Raised
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is Monday, January 16, and many educators will take the opportunity to teach about King and his enormous contributions to our society. As educators, how we approach the teaching of this holiday makes an impact on how students understand the larger context of the Civil Rights Movement and whether they make a connection between the past struggles to the current day and their own lives. Here are some thoughts about teaching the topic in a meaningful way…
January 14, 2015
Read more about Beyond the Dream, Teaching King in Context

Martin Luther King, Jr. and Civil Rights: Relevancy for Today

Lesson Plan
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr March on DC
GRADE LEVEL: Elementary School, Middle School, High School COMMON CORE STANDARDS: Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening, History/Social Studies In commemoration of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, this curriculum for grades 3–12 provides grade-specific lessons, resources and extension activities to provide your students opportunities to examine civil rights in the United States past and present. The lessons provide an opportunity for students to delve deeper into Martin Luther King Jr…
November 12, 2014
Read more about Martin Luther King, Jr. and Civil Rights: Relevancy for Today

Beyond Ferguson and Staten Island: Where Do We Go From Here?

Article
by: Oren Segal December 05, 2014 In the wake of two grand jury decisions—in Ferguson, MO and Staten Island, NY—not to indict the police officers who were involved in the killing of black men, the time has come to ask ourselves: Where do we go from here? There are a myriad of ideas and legislation on the table--diversity training for the police, funding to provide body cameras for police officers and legislation to tighten standards on military-style equipment for local police…
December 05, 2014
Read more about Beyond Ferguson and Staten Island: Where Do We Go From Here?

Civil Rights Act of 1964: 7 Ways to Commemorate the Anniversary

Lesson Plan
Lyndon B. Johnson Signing Civil Rights Act
Teach students about the history of discrimination and racism in the U.S., the struggle for civil rights and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
June 09, 2014
Read more about Civil Rights Act of 1964: 7 Ways to Commemorate the Anniversary

70+ Years Later: The Legacy of Brown v. Board of Education

Lesson Plan
Brown v. Board of Education School Segregation Protest
GRADE LEVEL: Middle School, High School COMMON CORE STANDARDS: Reading, Speaking and Listening, Language “We conclude that in the field of public education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.” These are the words of the landmark Supreme Court decision on May 17, 1954 that declared segregated schools unconstitutional. More than seventy years later, even though much progress has been made, there are…
May 15, 2014
Read more about 70+ Years Later: The Legacy of Brown v. Board of Education

Stereotyped Theme Parties Are Way More than a Joke on College Campuses

Article
by: Oren Segal February 26, 2014   It happened again. College students dressed up like members of a “culture” for a stereotyped theme party. In the most recent example, sorority students at Columbia University were photographed wearing sombreros, thick mustaches, ponchos and holding maracas. They also portrayed other nationalities. What’s worse is that these types of parties are not anomalies, but common occurrences on college campuses. African-themed…
February 26, 2014
Read more about Stereotyped Theme Parties Are Way More than a Joke on College Campuses

Incident at University of Mississippi Concerns Racism

Letter
February 21, 2014 Daniel W. Jones, M.D. Chancellor The University of Mississippi Dear Chancellor Jones: We are writing to express our deep concern about the recent incident at the University of Mississippi in which two unidentified men placed a noose around the neck of the statue of James Meredith, the school’s first black student.  There have reportedly been other recent incidences of troubling acts of homophobia and racism. College is a unique and special time in a young person…
February 21, 2014
Read more about Incident at University of Mississippi Concerns Racism

Challenging Anti-Immigrant Bias with Education

Article
by: Mark Onofrio February 07, 2014 Criticism of immigrant policy is not an excuse to undermine the humanity of others with the kind of vitriol that dominated the internet, especially Twitter, after the Atlanta-based Coca Cola Company aired a commercial with “America the Beautiful,” sung in different languages and featuring a diversity of people during the Super Bowl. The term immigrant is a descriptor, not a slur. However, it is often used in a pejorative way. For those who are…
February 07, 2014
Read more about Challenging Anti-Immigrant Bias with Education

Richard Sherman and Enduring Racial Stereotypes

Article
by: Mark Onofrio January 24, 2014 We recently had a reminder of the endur­ing power of stereo­types in Amer­i­can when an inter­view by Seat­tle Sea­hawks cor­ner­back Richard Sher­man prompted a slew of racist remarks on Twit­ter and a main­stream media com­men­ta­tor referred to him as a “thug” and an “ape.” While per­haps unin­ten­tional on the part of media com­men­ta­tors, the…
January 24, 2014
Read more about Richard Sherman and Enduring Racial Stereotypes

Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service

Article
by: Mark Onofrio January 13, 2014 Five Tips for Working with Children, Tweens and Teens  As we honor Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy through the National Day of Service, we encourage teachers, parents and families to provide community service opportunities for children and youth.  Below are tips to help make the experience meaningful.   “Everybody can be great...because anybody can serve. You don't have to have a college degree to…
January 13, 2014
Read more about Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service

Educator's Lesson Plan: Nelson Mandela

Article
by: Mark Onofrio December 06, 2013   Many educators want to incorporate the passing of significant figures into their classroom discussion. ADL’s Education Division provides resources to educators about contemporary issues and current event topics to help make classroom learning more dynamic forums for critical thinking. In celebration and memory of the life of Nelson Mandela, this special edition of The Current Events Classroom provides students the opportunity to learn…
December 06, 2013
Read more about Educator's Lesson Plan: Nelson Mandela

The Trouble With Make Me a “Stereotype”

Article
by: Mark Onofrio January 11, 2013 Applications for smartphones and tablets have become an emerging segment of the online and entertainment industry.  As with videos, blogs and social networking platforms which came before, Apps are now being created that some consider funny, but which  actually cross the line from humorous to offensive.  Recent examples include two free apps on Google called “Make Me Asian” and “Make Me Indian,” that allow users to edit…
January 11, 2013
Read more about The Trouble With Make Me a “Stereotype”

Pagination

  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • First page 1
  • …

  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Current page 5
  • Last page 6
  • Next page Next ›
ADL Logo

Anti-Defamation League


P.O. Box 4495


New York, NY 10163


(212) 885.7700

Footer

  • Financials
  • Contact
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • ADL en Español
  • Events
  • Research & Analysis
  • Find Ways to Give
  • Press Center

Footer Social Links

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • TikTok

© 2026 Anti-Defamation League. All Rights Reserved.